Not due to environment, all kinematic (=Siemens style 4 cylinder alpha
arrangement) are fundamentally flawed due to highly stressed non-lubricated
piston rod seals that only last a few months in continuous use.

Alternative free-piston engines (eg infinia) are screwed due to very high
tolerances required for gas lubricated bearings/seals and low speed heavy
generators.

Stirling engines are the perpetual bridesmaids of the heat engine world.
 Cyclone power looking good if they can deliver the 30%+ eff promised.


On 27 March 2014 04:37, AlanG <[email protected]> wrote:

>  I believe the SES Stirling engine was designed by Kockums. It had
> reliability and maintenance problems in the dusty desert environment of the
> Maricopa solar plant, but is claimed to work well in the original submarine
> application:
>
> http://www.kockums.se/en/products-services/submarines/stirling-aip-system/
>
> AlanG
>
> On 3/24/2014 7:42 PM, Kevin O'Malley wrote:
>
>    There are a few efforts that look like they might break out in 2015,
> whether it's Rossi or Brullion or Defkalion or whomever.
>
>  All of them would need to convert heat to electricity.  That means a
> Stirling engine, unless you believe the guys at Deuo Dynamics who have a
> direct thermoelectric conversion in their LENR diode.
>
>  Which Stirling Engine is the best?
>
>  Cyclone Power?  They have Dr. Kim
>
>  Infinia?  bankrupt, sold Stirling stuff to qenergy.com
>
>  Dean Kamen?  The Segway inventor went silent on his Stirling patent
> www.stirlingengine.com/*kamen/dean*_*kamen*_patent.html
>
>  Any others worth looking at?  When LENR hits big, stirling cycle engines
> will have their day in the sun.
>
>
>

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